| Literature DB >> 31576060 |
Adam Karoutas1,2, Witold Szymanski3, Tobias Rausch4, Sukanya Guhathakurta1,2, Eva A Rog-Zielinska5, Remi Peyronnet5, Janine Seyfferth1, Hui-Ru Chen1,2, Rebecca de Leeuw6, Benjamin Herquel1, Hiroshi Kimura7, Gerhard Mittler3, Peter Kohl5, Ohad Medalia6,8, Jan O Korbel4, Asifa Akhtar9.
Abstract
While nuclear lamina abnormalities are hallmarks of human diseases, their interplay with epigenetic regulators and precise epigenetic landscape remain poorly understood. Here, we show that loss of the lysine acetyltransferase MOF or its associated NSL-complex members KANSL2 or KANSL3 leads to a stochastic accumulation of nuclear abnormalities with genomic instability patterns including chromothripsis. SILAC-based MOF and KANSL2 acetylomes identified lamin A/C as an acetylation target of MOF. HDAC inhibition or acetylation-mimicking lamin A derivatives rescue nuclear abnormalities observed in MOF-deficient cells. Mechanistically, loss of lamin A/C acetylation resulted in its increased solubility, defective phosphorylation dynamics and impaired nuclear mechanostability. We found that nuclear abnormalities include EZH2-dependent histone H3 Lys 27 trimethylation and loss of nascent transcription. We term this altered epigenetic landscape "heterochromatin enrichment in nuclear abnormalities" (HENA). Collectively, the NSL-complex-dependent lamin A/C acetylation provides a mechanism that maintains nuclear architecture and genome integrity.Entities:
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Year: 2019 PMID: 31576060 DOI: 10.1038/s41556-019-0397-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Cell Biol ISSN: 1465-7392 Impact factor: 28.824